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A new census of dust and PAHs at z=0.7-2 with JWST MIRI

Authors :
Shivaei, Irene
Alberts, Stacey
Florian, Michael
Rieke, George
Wuyts, Stijn
Bodansky, Sarah
Bunker, Andrew J.
Cameron, Alex J.
Curti, Mirko
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Dudzeviciute, Ugne
Kramarenko, Ivan
Ji, Zhiyuan
Johnson, Benjamin D.
Lyu, Jianwei
Matthee, Jorryt
Morrison, Jane
Naidu, Rohan
Reddy, Naveen
Robertson, Brant
Pérez-González, Pablo G.
Sun, Yang
Tacchella, Sandro
Whitaker, Katherine
Williams, Christina C.
Willmer, Christopher N. A.
Witstok, Joris
Xiao, Mengyuan
Zhu, Yongda
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This paper utilizes the JWST MIRI multi-band imaging data from the SMILES survey (5-25micron), complemented with HST and NIRCam photometric and spectroscopic data from the JADES and FRESCO surveys for 443 star-forming (non-AGN) galaxies at z=0.7-2.0 to extend the study of dust and PAH emission to a new mass and SFR parameter space beyond our local universe. We find a strong correlation between the fraction of dust in PAHs (PAH fraction, q_PAH) with stellar mass. Moreover, the PAH fraction behavior as a function of gas-phase metallicity is similar to that at z~0 from previous studies, suggesting a universal relation: q_PAH is constant (~3.4%) above a metallicity of ~ 0.5$Z_{\odot}$ and decreases to <1% at metallicities $<0.3Z_{\odot}$. This indicates that metallicity is a good indicator of the ISM properties that affect the balance between the formation and destruction of PAHs. The lack of a redshift evolution from z~0-2 also implies that above $0.5\,Z_{\odot}$, the PAH emission effectively traces obscured luminosity and the previous locally-calibrated PAH-SFR calibrations remain applicable in this metallicity regime. We observe a strong correlation between obscured UV luminosity fraction (ratio of obscured to total luminosity) and stellar mass. Above the stellar mass of $>5\times 10^9M_{\odot}$, on average, more than half of the emitted luminosity is obscured, while there exists a non-negligible population of lower mass galaxies with >50% obscured fractions. At a fixed mass, the obscured fraction correlates with SFR surface density. This is a result of higher dust covering fractions in galaxies with more compact star forming regions. Similarly, galaxies with high IRX (IR to UV luminosity) at a given mass or UV continuum slope tend to have higher SFR surface density and shallower attenuation curves, owing to their higher effective dust optical depths and more compact star forming regions.<br />Comment: Submitted to A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.07989
Document Type :
Working Paper